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What immediate problems did Henry VII after he had
defeated Richard III (at Bosworth) and how did he solve
them?
His claim to the throne was weak; in fact it was the
weakest claim since William the Conqueror. His claim was
through an illegitimate line (somewhere in his family
history two of his ancestors had not been married) and
he was technically barred from the throne.
Other claimants (people who thought they had a right to
be King) included:
1. Edward, Earl of Warwick – Nephew of Richard III and
Edward IV.
2. John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln – Nephew of Richard III
and Edward IV. He had been nominated by Richard III as his
heir.
3. Edmund de la Pole – Nephew of Edward IV and Richard III.
4. The Princes in the Tower - Edward V and his brother
Richard. Sons of Edward IV.
The Yorkists still had support in the north of England
and in Ireland and had a powerful ally in Richard III's
sister Margaret, dowager duchess of Burgundy. This
made it inevitable that other claimants would crop up and
challenge Henry for the throne.
Many of the barons/nobles still possessed armies
(retainers) that were a constant threat to Henry and
peace in the country. (Overmighty subjects)
The crown's treasury was nearly empty after the 100
Years War and the subsequent War of the Roses.
England did not enjoy good relations with many
countries of Europe. There was a constant threat of
invasion from Europe on behalf of the Yorkists. All the
powers of Europe doubted Henry's ability to survive, and
most were willing to help Henry‟s opponents .
English trade had suffered during the War of the Roses
(WotR) and badly needed help.
Spain was becoming a major power in Europe as she began
to create an Empire in the New World (Central America,
South America and the Caribbean).
Henry was determined to restore order to the nation.
England needed stability and peace.
He wanted to be wise and firm. In Henry's mind there
was no doubt that his major problem were his rivals to
the throne and the nobles who might support them.
Many of the nobles with whom he was going to have to
deal with were greedy, selfish power seeking men who
changed sides at the drop of a hat.
They were untrustworthy and had little moral conscience.
This was a „New Monarchy’ and Henry would have to
fight fire with fire and would often have to employ
bullyboy tactics against them in order to achieve his
aims.
Henry was only too aware that he had won his crown in
battle. If he wasn‟t extremely careful the same could
happento him!
HENRY VII – HOW HE DEALT WITH RIVALS TO THE
THRONE.
Rivals and Rebellions
In 1486, he married Elizabeth of York (daughter of
Edward IV) and in doing so he united the houses of
Lancaster and York. Some Yorkist supporters were now
on his side.
Edward, Earl of Warwick (a rival to the throne) was
placed in the Tower. John de la Pole, the Earl of Lincoln
was made to submit to Henry, recognise him as King and
give up his claim to the throne.
The fate of the Princes in the Tower was uncertain.
However, there are an increasing number of historians
who believe that Henry arranged for them to be killed.
The first rebellion, against Henry that, led by Lord
Lovell, in 1486 was ill prepared and unimportant.
In 1487, a Yorkist plot put forward Lambert Simnel
pretending he was the Earl of Warwick. John de la Pole,
earl of Lincoln, was behind the plot with additional help
from many Irish chieftains, and of 2,000 German
mercenaries paid for Yorkist supporters abroad.
Henry immediately took the real Earl of Warwick out of
the Tower and paraded him around the streets of London.
There was little support for Simnel's army and it was
crushed at the Battle of Stoke on 16th June 1487.
All the Yorkist leaders, including the Earl of Lincoln, were
killed except Simnel who was captured.
Henry realised that Simnel was just a pawn and he was
made to work in the royal kitchen for the rest of his life.
In 1491, The Yorkists again put forward another
imposter. This time it was Perkin Warbeck claiming to be
Richard, Duke of York, the younger of the two princes,
kept/murdered in the tower.
An invasion in 1495, failed and Warbeck was captured and
held custody in the Royal household.
Henry discovered that a number of his so called
supporters had been involved in the plot, including Sir
William Stanley. They were all executed.
Warbeck remained in custody until he escaped in 1498.
He invaded again in 1499, when Henry who decided enough
was enough, had Warbeck executed.
Warbeck had received help at some time or other from
France, James IV of Scotland, Maximilian I of Austria as
well as powerful figures in England and Ireland.
In 1499, Henry negotiated the marriage of his son Arthur
to a Spanish princess, Catherine of Aragon.
Ferdinand, the Spanish King, fearing for his daughter‟s
safety, would not agree to the marriage until all rivals to
Henry‟s throne had been eliminated.
The Earl of Warwick suddenly found himself facing a
charge of treason and subsequent execution. In 1506 he
imprisoned the Yorkist Edmund de La Pole in the Tower of
London, that Henry could at last feel safe. The last of
Henry’s possible rivals for the throne had been
eliminated.
Henry had now effectively and successfully achieved one
of his objectives. HE had dealt with his rivals and made
sure that there would be no more attempts to dethrone
him.
HENRY VII AND HIS FINANCIAL PROBLEMS
Restoring the Wealth of the Crown
Henry wanted to make the crown financially independent
of Parliament, in other words he didn't always want to
have to rely on Parliament granting him sums of money.
He received an annual sum from Parliament (Tunnage and
Poundage). Therefore, it was Henry's policy to gather up
as much money as humanly possible. How did he go about
this?
Henry confiscated the land of Yorkist rebels. Henry made
money from these lands.
The collection of forced loans.
Henry had his own retainers dressed in their green and
white livery that „visited‟ selected persons and put the
pressure on them to make “gifts” to His Majesty. In
reality, Henry was running a protection racket.
He accepted 'free' gifts from rich subjects, seen as a
sign of goodwill and respect for Henry.
He encouraged efficiency in administration. Most of the
money collected from taxes went into the Royal Treasury
that was now run by able and energetic servants and
supervised by the king himself. He signed the accounts
books!
He used the Court of Star Chamber to impose fines on
nobles that committed crimes.
He owned the custom duties on wool exports so did much
to make sure that the wool trade was helped when he
made treaties with foreign countries.
Nobles that inherited land on the deaths of their fathers
had to pay a fee to the Henry before they were able to
take over the land. This was called “relief”.
Nobles had to pay fees when their daughters married.
Known as “aid”.
Henry sold offices and positions to suitable buyers.
In 1491, Henry invaded France. The French quickly agreed
a Treaty at Etaples that gave Henry an instant
£149,000.
When Arthur married Catherine of Aragon, Henry
received a huge dowry from Ferdinand of Spain.
Henry checked all the accounts himself and signed to
that effect.
He even changed his signature from time to time to avoid
any fraud.
Once again Henry was successful in achieving his financial
aims. He is often portrayed as a miser. He was cunning
and secretive and kept lists of those people who he
thought were trustworthy or not.
He avoided expensive wars that would have drained his
treasury.
During his reign he increased his annual income from
£50,000 to £140,000. He also accumulated a treasury
worth about £1½ million – £2 million.
He was the last King to die leaving a surplus in the treasury.
HENRY VII - CONTROLLING THE POWER OF THE
NOBILITY… THE 'OVERMIGHTY SUBJECTS'
Fortunately for Henry many of the nobles had been killed
during the War of the Roses.
However, the few who remained were extremely rich and
powerful. The Earls of Warwick had held double the land
of any previous man and had a personal armies of over
30,000 soldiers
If Henry and the Tudor dynasty were going to survive he
had to do it on his own two feet and needed to destroy
such men and the threat that they posed.
WHAT ACTIONS DID HENRY TAKE AGAINST THESE
POWERFUL NOBLES?
The Act of Livery was passed in 1503: This banned the
keeping private armies. This removed the threat of
rebellion.
The Statute of Maintenance was passed:
This prevented nobles from
1. Bribing judges and juries
2. Frightening judges and juries into giving false decision by
crowding court rooms with retainers.
3. Causing riots.
4. Holding unlawful meetings.
Henry gave himself the sole monopoly of gunpowder.
Without it the nobles would not be able to defy the King
in long sieges. Henry had the ability to destroy their
castles.
No castle building was allowed without Henry‟s
permission.
Henry employed middle-class men and respected
churchmen as his advisers and appointed them to the
important offices in the land.
The Court of Star Chamber brought to trial any nobles
who had broken the Acts of Livery and Maintenance.
Juries were not used but instead a panel of judges
consisting of the Lord Chancellor, Treasurer, Keeper of
the Privy Seal, a bishop, two chief justices and a lord of
council.
Offenders were fined heavily and often had their lands
confiscated.
Henry refused to show favouritism. Even his friend the
Earl of Oxford was fined £15,000 for breaking the
Statute of Livery and Maintenance.
Gradually, Henry struck at the wealth of the nobles.
He took back all the land that had been given away by
kings in the past.
With their power broken, Henry appointed nobles who he
felt he could trust to important positions.
However, there was now an important difference. Henry
was running the show not the nobles.
Henry had once again achieved all he had set out to
do.
The nobles were now under control, less threatening and
considerably less wealthy.
Henry was richer and safer.
Henry's Foreign Policy (dealing with other countries).
The Hundred Years War and The War of the Roses had
resulted in a breakdown of relationships and trade with
Europe.
Henry realised the importance of good foreign relations
and healthy trade.
Henry was poor and his position insecure.
Peace reduced the threat of imposters and rivals finding
support abroad and it was cheaper than war.
Spain and France were the two powers in Europe and
Henry was to play one off against the other.
Support abroad would also ensure the continuance of the
Tudor Dynasty.
In 1501, he married his eldest son Arthur to Catherine
of Aragon, thus establishing peace with Spain.
The fact that Ferdinand of Spain allowed his daughter to
marry a Tudor, clearly shows the growing respect that
Spain had for Henry and England.
After the death of Arthur in 1502, Henry arranged for
his second son, Henry, to marry Catherine of Aragon,
thereby maintaining the peace with Spain.
With Scotland the long tradition of war and hostility was
harder to overcome; but Henry eventually succeeded in
concluding in 1499 a treaty of peace, and in 1503, he
married one of his daughters, Margaret, to James IV
of Scotland.
This reduced the French influence in Scotland and
therefore also made sure there was no rebellion from
over the border.
He agreed the Treaty of Etaples, in 1492 with Charles
VIII of France and he made arrangements for his
daughter Mary to marry Louis the Dauphin (heir to the
throne of France).
Trade
In 1485, he passed the Navigation Act in order to build
up the Merchant Navy.
Wines from France were only to be carried aboard ships
manned by English, Welsh or Irish sailors.
He made treaties with Italian States and encouraged
English ships to trade in the Mediterranean.
He made treaties with Denmark and the Port of Riga.
This gave English ships valuable access to the Baltic Sea
area and allowed them to compete for trade in northern
Germany.
In 1496, Henry agreed a treaty with Flanders (modern
Holland and Belgium). This allowed the trade of English
cloth and wool without a hindrance.
In 1497, Henry paid for John and Sebastian Cabot's
voyages of exploration. Newfoundland (part of modern
Canada) was claimed for England. If these had paid off,
Henry would have been considerably wealthier.
In conclusion
Henry was unattractive, hard-hearted, mean, crafty and
often cruel yet he could be courteous.
However, Henry appears to have achieved all he
attempted to do.
His success can be summed up in the important fact that
when he died, his son Henry succeeded to the throne
without any dispute or rivals.
The House of Tudor had been established.
Henry's methods may have appeared to be those of a
gangster or thug. However, he lived in difficult times,
surrounded by difficult people who would often not listen
to reason and who were more concerned with themselves
than the interests of the country.
His achievements were beneficial to England and led to
greater things.
Many would argue that the „end justified the means’.
The Masked Historian likes Henry VII‟s story and wishes
that more books for school children would pay more
attention to what he has described as “The Forgotten
Tudor”.
Henry VII
Problems and Solutions (Summary)
The problems faced by Henry VII during his time as King.
 Became king by killing Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth in
1485. Possibility that others could do the same to him.
 Nobles had become very powerful during the War of the Roses.
 Henry had no money. Spent on the War of the Roses.
 Nobles had private armies….the king was not in control of these
soldiers.
 Needed to make peace between the warring houses of Lancaster
and York.
 France, Scotland and Spain were potential enemies and threats.
 After thirty years of war there had been a breakdown of law and
order. Soldiers were roaming about committing crimes.
 Henry had to face Rebellions in 1486, 1487 and 1497.
How did Henry VII manage to make the monarchy strong,
powerful and wealthy.
 Powerful Nobles: Henry made the nobles give him “LOANS”
of large sums of money. Henry did not repay these loans.
This INCREASED Henry‟s wealth and DECREASED the
wealth and power of the Nobility. Henry outlawed private
armies. All soldiers were then commanded by the King. The
Court of Star Chamber was created specifically for nobles
that committed crimes. Henry was the Judge. The
punishments were huge fines.
 France, Scotland and Spain: He made political marriages
for children with each of these countries. This turned
enemies into friends (allies). He arranged a marriage
between Arthur and Catherine of Aragon (Spain) when he
signed the treaty of Medina del Campo in 1489. The treaty
of Etaples in 1492 made peace between England and France
and eventually led to a marriage between Henry‟s daughter,
Mary, and the heir to the French throne. The Treaty of
Perpetual Peace with Scotland made in 1502 arranged for
Henry‟s eldest daughter, Mary to marry the King of
Scotland.
 Making peace: Married Elizabeth of York to bring York and
Lancaster together. Tudor Rose. Gave a pardon to Yorkists in
return for their loyalty.
 Money: Kept England out of wars. Tax collection-he made the
system more organised and efficient. He took a personal
interest in tax collection- he signed the accounts!. “Loans”
taken from nobles. Huge fines in Star Chamber. Treaties
with Spain and France encouraged trade as well as arranging
marriages. Taxes were ruthlessly collected ending with
Henry getting the reputation as being a King that loved
money above all other things.
 Law and order: Henry strengthened the Law by creating
Justices of the Peace (local judges) who had the power to
arrest suspects and put them on trial.
 Rebellions: He fought rebellions and executed their leaders.
He showed that he was not to be challenged.